If the weather is tolerable, I’d rather walk miles -so to speak- than pay for a bus/subway/taxi fare. The point is, I’m the exception here, I need music 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. That’s more than one CD per day on average while at the same time, I still wear the same sneakers I got 3 years ago and only have 2 pairs of (cargo) pants to go around! Styx – “The grand illusion and Pieces of eight – Live” €12,49 Nightwish – “Made in Hong Kong (& in various other places)” €6,99 Scorpions – “Sting in the tail” €7,99Īnnihilator – “Never, Neverland” €5,89įleetwood Mac – “Tango in the night” €4,99ĭemon – “The unexpected guest” €7,49 Glenn Hughes – “First underground nuclear kitchen” €3,09 V/A – “Butchering The Beatles: A headbashing tribute” €9,49Įkseption – “3 Originals” €13,69 Royal Hunt – “Paradox II: Collision course” €6,59 Oh, to Hell with it! Here’s a fully detailed list: Last month alone I purchased… Let me check my records… And I’m known to ignore basic necessities in favour of CDs! The vast majority has to deal with a very specific budget, do you honestly think they could afford them all?Įven if the file-sharing magically disappeared, they’d still be in no position to buy more than a month. To perpetuate an unjust system in which middlemen enjoy the “lion’s share” while the artists get peanuts.Ĭlaiming that every *illegally* downloaded album or movie should count as *loss of profit* is laughable. RIAA, DMCA etc have been using the latter term arbitrarily in a rather pitiful attempt to convince the public of alleged crimes while concealing their true intentions: I’d very much like to see them getting ridiculed (on second thought, they’re already used to that and probably won’t mind) trying to explain WHY there was no *sales* increase as predicted.īecause with or without file-sharing *, it all comes down to how much customers can spend. In nature, when the host dies so do the PARASITES. Maybe then they’ll realise they were digging their own graves all along. You know something? I hope they ban everything! Bring the Internet traffic back to dial-up era levels. The hearing of the news alone, was enough to intimidate the majority of file hosting services which immediately took measures in order to comply with the law What better way to show who’s got the upper hand than to take down the * flagship*? Especially after failing to pass the SOPA/PIPA legislation. You don’t need to be a political analyst to realise it was a tactical hit, a display of power. Starting with Megaupload, which proved to be just the tip of the iceberg, the hull got breached. So, what (the Hell) have you been doing for an entire month?
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